Author:
Tiedeman Zachary,Signor Sarah
Abstract
AbstractTransposable elements are an important element of the complex genomic ecosystem, proving to be both adaptive and deleterious - repressed by the piRNA system and fixed by selection. Transposable element insertion also appears to be bursty – either due to invasion of new transposable elements that are not yet repressed, de-repression due to instability of organismal defense systems, stress, or genetic variation in hosts. Here, we characterize the transposable element landscape in an important modelDrosophila, D. serrata, and investigate variation in transposable element copy number between genotypes and in the population at large. We find that a subset of transposable elements are clearly related to elements annotated inD. melanogasterandD. simulans, suggesting they spread between species more recently than other transposable elements. We also find that transposable elements do proliferate in particular genotypes, and that often if an individual is host to a proliferating transposable element, it is host to more than one proliferating transposable element. In addition, if a transposable element is active in a genotype, it is often active in more than one genotype. This suggests that there is an interaction between the host and the transposable element, such as a permissive genetic background and the presence of potentially active transposable element copies. In natural populations an active transposable element and a permissive background would not be held in association as in inbred lines, suggesting the magnitude of the burst would be much lower. Yet many of the inbred lines have actively proliferating transposable elements suggesting this is an important mechanism by which transposable elements maintain themselves in populations.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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